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Do you get more excited about your work than about family or anything else?
■	Are there times when you can charge through your work and other times when you can't get anything done?
■	Do you take work with you to bed? On weekends? On vacation?
■	Is work the activity you like to do best and talk about most?
■	Do you work more than 40 hours a week?
■	Do you turn your hobbies into money-making ventures?
■	Do you take complete responsibility for the outcome of your work efforts?
■	Have your family or friends given up expecting you on time?
■	Do you take on extra work because you are concerned that it won’t otherwise get done?
■	Do you underestimate how long a project will take and then rush to complete it?
■	Do you believe that it is OK to work long hours if you love what you're doing?
n Do you get impatient with people who have other priorities besides work?
II	Are you afraid that if you don’t work hard you’ll lose your job or be a failure?
■	Is the future a constant worry for you even when things are going very well?
■	Do you do things energetically and competitively, including play?
■	Do you get irritated when people ask you to stop doing your work to do sc 'hing else?
;ave your long hours hurt your family or other relationships?
■	Do you think about your work while driving, falling asleep or when others are talking?
■	Do you work or read during meals?
H Do you believe that more money will solve the other problems in your life?
If you answered "yes" to three or more of these questions, there is a chance you are a workaholic or well on your way to becoming one.
SI 1	,1 I All	— WORKAHOLICS ANONYMOUS
aw- IMaJUI QcCifU*
tion” are Dyrene Owens, C.D., of Kids Connection; Barbra Pore, C.D. of Pioneer Day Care; Trudy Sauls, C.D., of Development Center Inc.; and Mary Williams, C.D., of New Testament Pentecostal Church. In the three-day 18-hour parenting course, credentialed directors are prepared to establish parent-provider partnerships.
Alfonso exhibition draws 1,400 people
The 10th annual Josephine Alfonso Memorial Exhibition presented by the Gulf Coast Art Association closed recently with record-setting results.
During the two-week event at Edgewater Mall, nearly 1,400 people viewed the show and 25 paintings were sold.
Purchase Award pledgers were as follows:
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Heaton, in memory of Edwin H. Heaton Jr.; Carl D. Alfonso, in memory of Tom-mye Alfonso; Dr. Phillip Bertucci,
of Mississippi, Inc., contributed to the Mississippi State University College of Agriculture to fund scholarships for the 2000-2001 academic year. Worthy students with high academic standings receive these
Borne
scholarships.
Mrs. Ronald F. Borne, president of the Garden Clubs of Mississippi, Inc., presented scholarships to the . three recipients: Daniel Ashworth of Starkville in landscape architecture, Scott Reed of West Point in horticulture and Scott Edwards in forestry.
Daniel Ashworth also received a $3,500 scholarship from the National Council of State Garden Clubs. During the past three years, the National Council of State Garden Clubs has awarded $8,700 to fund scholarships at MSU.
Waveland Yacht Club, Terri Yetter was elected president of the Hancock County Kiwanis Club for the 2000-2001 year. Yetter is employed with the Department of Human Services in Bay St. Louis. She has held many offices leading up to president
Other officers and board of directors are Bernard Chevalier, president elect; Roy Stoddard, secretary, and Robert Mintz, treasurer. Micah Necaise was the immediate past president
Members of the board are Betty Steckman, Ken Austin, Bernie Schmaltz, Russell Voorhies, Debbie McCardle and Amy Lagasse.
Special service awards were presented to Terri Yetter, Betty Stech-mann and Kathy Fernandez. Ken Austin was named “Kiwanian of the Year” for his involvement in many projects his club undertakes.
Bernie Schmaltz was the master of ceremonies for the evening and Lt Gov. Dennis Oliver was on hand to name the 2000-2001 leadership team.
ix. »jov. uenms uliver recently installed Claude Coleman as presi- ‘ dent of the Kiwanis Club of Ltice-dale for the 2000-2001 year. Coleman is the branch manager' of Union Planters Bank in Lucedale. He and his wife, Beth, have two' sons. He will be the second president in the youth club chartered in 1999.
Other officers and board are Tammy Hultz, president elect;1 Hank Cochran, vice president; * Ellen Strahan, secretary; and Lisa Fisher, treasurer.
Board of Directors include Scott Hicks, Dayton Whites, Jackie Shirley, Eileen Mann and Peter Vanlingen.
Special awards were given for out- . standing ‘sendee to Linda Kraft, Eileen Mann, Suzy Scott, Angie. Kiser, Debora Hancock and Marcie, Pierce.
A special “Kiwanis fellow” was awarded to Sue Wright past president for her dedicated year of leadership.
Fire was final fate of Clermont Harbor Hotel
The imposing building in today’s Flashback is a postcard image of the Clermont Hr ' ->r Hotel, which overlooked th. .ississippi Sound at Clermont Harbor, about two miles west of Waveland in Hancock County. But as imposing as it looks, the hotel was, in the words of the last owner, an ill-fated “Jonah.”
The history of the hotel is told in an article written in 1996 by John Guerin. A grand but unsuccessful scheme to create a beach resort, or “Rivierra,” at Clermont Harbor to attract people of New Orleans, included the creation of a motorboat harbor, a 500-foot wharf, a bathhouse, a dancing pavilion and
by Murella Powell
Coast
Flashback
the building of the Clermont Harbor Hotel, which was completed by 1913.
Just two years later, the hurricane of Sept 29,1915, nearly finished it off. The owners borrowed heavily against the property, and, in 1925,
they hired Hugh Turner Carr of Virginia to rebuild the damaged hotel. According to Gherin, Carr
found one store, a post office, and “a million mosquitoes” in Clermont Harbor. Despite the mosquitoes, Canr fell in love with the Mississippi Coast and spent the rest of his life here.
On July 3 and 4,1926, the L&N railroad sent 4 extra trains crowded with New Orleanians headed to coast cities for the holiday. The destination of one of those trains, with 500 on board, was the Clermont Harbor Hotel for the celebration of its grand opening. But the hotel again faced disaster with the financial crisis of 1929 and the Great Depression that followed.
Finally, about 1945, the hotel passed into the hands M Wilfred
Guerin, president of the Clermont Harbor Hotel Corporation. The grand opening on June 1,1946, drew crowds, but those who had spent the night had to vacate in their bedclothes in the early morning, as the hotel was on fire. With no fire hydrants in Clermont Harbor, the building burned to the ground.
Send local photographs for Coast Flashback to Murella H. Powell, Biloxi Public Library, 139 Lameuse St., Biloxi, MS 39530; or call her at 374-0330. Please send a description with your name, address and daytime phone. Photos will be tetumed.
HMIBOH INN. CLE1HOI1T HARBOR MISS.
PHOTO COURTESY OF RANDY RANDAZZO
The 40-room, 20-bathroom Clermont Harbor Hotel, built of virgin cypress, survived hurricanes, financial disaster and vandals, but could not survive a basement fire on its lafet grand opening night. *	4


Clermont Harbor Hotel Fire-1946-(3)
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